Win Sucker Punch Book Crammed With Sex ’n’ Violence Concept Art

A group portrait presents the leading ladies of Sucker Punch: Left to right, Amber, Rocket, Sweet Pea, Blondie and Babydoll.

A smiley-faced robot is poised for action in this Sucker Punch concept art.

Samurai fighters face Sucker Punch character Babydoll in her first challenge.

One of Sucker Punch's machine-gun-toting henchman stands front and center.

A World War I-inspired battlefield in Sucker Punch takes Babydoll and company into the trenches.

Robots, lingerie, dirigibles, tanks and spaceships crowd onto the pages of a new book of concept art for Zack Snyder’s upcoming Sucker Punch movie.

Titan Books’ Sucker Punch: The Art of the Film ($35) chronicles the preproduction process that took place before Snyder started shooting his PG-13-rated action fantasy. It features renderings by concept designer Alex Pardee along with paintings and sketches by costumers, set builders and visual effects artists.

“I saw the book as a visually interesting way to deconstruct the process of designing and prepping a film, peeling it apart layer by layer,” Snyder said in a statement ahead of Sucker Punch‘s Friday opening. “I wanted to share that in a meaningful way, beyond what’s captured on screen.”

The vivid artwork shows how the filmmakers fleshed out details of the fantastical worlds springing from the imagination of lead character Babydoll (played by Emily Browning), who becomes unjustly institutionalized in an insane asylum. The book includes on-set photography by Clay Enos, and the 257-page hardcover volume is also available in a $75 limited-edition version autographed by Watchmen director Snyder.

Win Sucker Punch Book

Wired.com is teaming with publisher Titan Books to give away one copy of Sucker Punch: The Art of the Film. To qualify for the contest, comment below on the following question: Which Zack Snyder movie is your favorite and why?

Deadline to enter is 12:01 a.m. Pacific on March 28, 2011. One randomly selected winner will be notified by e-mail or Twitter. Note: If you do not have an e-mail address or Twitter handle associated with your Disqus login, you must include contact information in your comment to be eligible. Any winner who does not respond to Wired.com’s notification within 72 hours will forfeit the prize.